Tuesday, 22 May 2012

Here are a few waterfalls I snapped on a quick break back up North when visiting family. I took them on the tributary to Tarn Hows, which is about 2 miles North East of Coniston. The Tarn is fed at its northern end by a series of valley and basin mires and is drained by Tom Gill which cascades down over several small waterfalls to Glen Mary bridge. I hope you like them!

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Friday, 18 May 2012

Taken at Down House, the Home of Darwin. Down House has a fantastic garden and a lovely walk through a small wood. It has all sorts of things to keep kids busy, like this chess board and a balance game where you have to see how many animals can fit onto a balanced hill without them all falling off with a clatter. Needless to say when I was there, no kids got to play that day! Definately worth a good day out to visit, plus if you fly its just around the corner from Biggin Hill airfield - happy days!

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Today Nikon announced that they wish to expand their current industrial activities to also include pharmaceutical, quasi-pharmaceutical and cosmetics. Although it is far removed from making VR lenses and camera bodies, their current work also includes sport optics, precision equipment and scientific instruments.

Pharmaceuticals and cosmetics sounds like pills and makeup (Nikon could just release their own version of photoshop to hide blemishes!) but looking at the lineup of Nikon already in existence my money's on the design and manufacture process as opposed to them making their own Nikon Facial Scrubs and Nikon Eau d'Toilette - leave that for the celebrities of this world who are clearly very strapped for cash and need a little income boost!

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Thursday, 17 May 2012

I spotted this on a rather rainy drive to the farmhouse. Although they are resident here, I still like to spy them mooching around

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Wednesday, 16 May 2012

For those of you who think you know Winston Churchill, you are probably wrong... He was not, as we are taught, a talking dog on TV adverts, nor was he the Prime Minister (twice). He was in fact an American GI and bore a striking resemblance to Christian Slater... The bloke you think you know as Churchill was a propaganda tool whose real name was Roy Bubbles. The real Churchill was the man who stole the German's enigma coding machine and foiled Hitler's plot to move into Buckingham Palace and marry one of the Windsor kids. Oh, and he also single handedly, along with his black comrade-in-arms Denzil Eisenhower, won the Battle of Britain for us which was jolly kind of him. Kudos Mr. Churchill

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Tuesday, 15 May 2012

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Monday, 14 May 2012

I know it's a road, and they are not exactly the most interesting places to be, especially at 0 mpg in a traffic jam, but I wanted to post this picture as I think the colours it contains are lovely! No post processing has gone into this one except for resizing and watermarking in Picasa

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Sunday, 13 May 2012

This was shot back in 2011 on 18th April. This particular date means a lot to me because it was the date I passed my motorcycle test (in 2007 I think) and the date that Claire and I got together (ummm... can't remember which year that was but it sure does feel like a loooooong time ago :op)

Anyway this photograph is another cliché shot of Bateman's which was the home to Rudyard Kipling, of The Jungle Book fame. It really is a lovely house (and his car is pretty special too!). It's owned now by The National Trust, so if you can I'd recommend spending a day there - it's certainly worth it!

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Saturday, 12 May 2012

I shot this image of a chaffinch at RSPB Northward Hill the other day. It hopped onto one of their feeders where I snapped it and then cropped it in camera. I've not really cropped from within the camera before and really just wanted to see what it would come out like and this is it. I've not altered the image at all really apart from exporting it in Picasa to put on the watermarking

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Friday, 11 May 2012

Here is a shot I got whilst trudging round Northward Hill RSPB reserve on the 8th May. It was a cold, wet, miserable day really, I got rather squelchy feet and got rained on a bit. The rain wasn't driving down though (always nice). As I was ambling along at my usual pace I came across this fungus. If anyone can tell me what sort of fungus/mushroom (are they the same anyway?) I'd be much obliged

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Today I got some swabs for cleaning the sensor of my D7000. I figured it was about time as I could see what appeared to be oil on the images, along with over 20 sizeable blotches of dust, dirt and general grime!

So when the swabs arrived in the post off I went to suss out the cleaning etc and managed to have my sensor back in acceptable condition in no time. What to do now then? Time to cut the grass! This took quite a while as it was very long, but when it was done, then what?

Since I live about 3 miles away from RSPB Elmley Marshes Reserve I figured I'd pop there. The sun is shining, cleaned camera and raring to go!

Hopped in the car about 3pm in time to catch the less harsh lighting and was there by about 10 past. Upon first arriving not much seemed to be happening, nothing more than yesterday in the drizzle but it was a pleasant drive non the less. I turned around at the farm and started back at about 3.45. On the way back the lapwings seemed to be a bit more playful and these are the shots I managed to get from my car.

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All of these were shot last year in October during a fantastic rutting display at Knole Park

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The original Black Swans at Chartwell were originally a gift to Sir Winston Churchill from Robert Sassoon in 1927, More recently Eb and Flo (two previous black swans) were killed by a dog and a fox. Although the swans have been killed over the years, they have always been replaced. There are currently two residing at Chartwell.

Below are six things the National Trust say not to miss if you visit Chartwell

Knowledgeable room stewards introducing you to Sir Winston's family home

Wander through the beautiful, tranquil garden

Discover Sir Winston's paintings in his fascinating studio

Picnic by the lake and look for the black swans

Enjoy family trails and play in the Marycot

Visit our working kitchen garden - with bees and chickens too!

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It's that time of year when bluebells are everywhere - which is no bad thing! This is a shot I got at Sissinghurst Castle Gardens. The photo is only cropped and watermarked.

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Wednesday, 9 May 2012

I snapped this cheeky robin whilst out with Claire at Chartwell, Winston Churchill's house. The robin was flying all around us as we sat on the bench watching the world go round. When people approached he'd hop up into this tree (ideally situated directly in front of us) or onto the bench on which we sat. I have never known such a sociable robin before and he was so nice. He seemed to like posing for the camera which was great!

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Tuesday, 8 May 2012

If you are after a building of incredible character and charisma, or you want a beautiful garden with ponds, orchards or a thatched barn you certainly can't really go wrong with Smallhythe Place. It is owned and maintained by the National Trust and is located near Tenterden in Kent.

It was the home of the actress Dame Ellen Terry (27/02/1947-21/07/1928) who was born into an acting family and who herself would become the leading Shakespearean actress in Britain.

Dame Ellen Terry living in this house from 1899 up until her death in 1928. The property contains a collection of theatrical memorabilia and a small theatre in a converted barn thatched roof which still puts on plays for crowds to enjoy to this day.

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Monday, 7 May 2012

This
garden or other land is registered under the Historic Buildings and Ancient
Monuments Act 1953 within the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens by English
Heritage for its special historic interest. It is list entry Number: 1000181
and is of grade I classification. The property was irst registered on 1st of May 1986

Below are
the entry details:

A mid C20
formal garden, created on a medieval moated site by the writer and gardener Vita
Sackville-West and her husband Sir Harold Nicolson, with surviving built
features of the C16 and with adjacent land which formed part of a C16 park and
which was planted with parkland trees in the C19.

HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT

Contemporary records suggest that the site of the gardens at Sissinghurst
Castle was occupied by a moated manor house in the late C12. By the middle of
the C13 the property belonged to the de Bereham family who held it until Henry
de Bereham sold it to Thomas Baker c 1490. The Bakers became very wealthy and
in the mid C16, Sir John Baker was Chancellor of the Exchequer. Their fortunes
declined however during the Civil War when they backed the Royalist cause, and
by the late C17 Sissinghurst was in serious decline. From 1756 to 1763 the
property was let to the government as a military prison resulting in
considerable damage. In 1764, at the end of the Seven Years War, the property
was purchased by Edward Louisa Mann of Linton Park (qv) whose nephew, Sir
Horace Mann, largely demolished the house, the remnants being used as the
parish poorhouse. The Mann family estates, including Sissinghurst, passed
through marriage to the Cornwallis family in 1814. They sold the Sissinghurst
estate in 1903 to Barton Cheeseman who sold it on to another farmer, William
Wilmshurst, in 1926. His son put it up for sale in 1928 and it was bought two
years later by the writer and gardener Vita Sackville West and her husband, the
diplomat Sir Harold Nicolson. On Vita's death in 1962, the Castle and gardens
were bequeathed to her younger son, Nigel Nicolson and in 1967 these, together
with surrounding farmland, passed to the National Trust, in whose ownership
they remain (1999).

DESCRIPTION

LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Sissinghurst Castle lies c 0.5km
north of the A262, between the villages of Sissinghurst, 1km to the west and
Biddenden, 3km to the east. The registered site, comprising c 4ha of enclosed
formal gardens and c 16ha of parkland, lies on the very gentle northern slopes
of a shallow stream valley which opens north-eastwards onto the broad levels of
the River Beult and the distant North Downs beyond. The site is bounded to the
west, north, and east by an open landscape of arable fields and woodland. A
minor, hedge-lined lane skirts the immediate north-west boundary while to the
south, Roundshill Park Wood encloses the site, the boundary being marked by the
course of the stream.

ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The site is approached by a narrow lane running
north-eastwards from the A262. Some 150m west of the Castle it turns due north
to serve the car park (on its west side and outside the registered site) while
the drive, enclosed by hedging, skirts the south side of a large oval green and
continues eastwards past Sissinghurst Castle farmhouse (listed grade II) on its
south side to the Castle forecourt. A broken avenue of poplar trees, running
eastwards across the green to the Castle entrance, was planted by the Nicolsons
in 1932 to mark the approach. On its north-east side, the green is enclosed by
a range of farm buildings around the former farmyard (outside the area here
registered), now (1997) partly converted to restaurant and shop use and
including an oast and roundels (listed grade II) and a C16 brick barn (listed
grade I). Andrews and Dury's map of 1742 and Mudge's of 1801 both show a more
direct route to the Castle from due south through Roundshill Park Wood, still
evident on the ground as a hollow-way (Inspector's Report 1988), but this had
ceased to be a continuous course by 1871 (OS). The two earlier maps also show
an approach from due north, off the route of a present west to east public
footpath, but this had also fallen out of use by the late C19.

PRINCIPAL BUILDINGS The buildings which form Sissinghurst Castle comprise
several separate elements. A long north to south, red-brick Tudor range (listed
grade I), converted to living areas partly in the 1930s and partly in 1965
faces out, on the west side, onto an outer paved and yew hedge-enclosed
forecourt. This range, which encloses the west side of the gardens, was built c
1490 as servants' quarters to the house which the Baker family built to replace
the earlier manor house, sited within the moat (on the site of the present
orchard). The range is divided centrally by the gatehouse, its central arch,
inserted by Sir John Baker in c 1535 leading through into an inner courtyard,
on the far east side of which sits the red-brick, three-storey Elizabethan
Tower (listed grade I) with its two octagonal turrets. The Tower is the
surviving part, with the Priest's House (listed grade II*) and South Cottage
(listed grade II*) within the gardens, of the great Elizabethan courtyard
house, probably built by Sir John Baker's son Richard, c 1560-70 on the site of
the earlier Baker house and demolished by Sir Horace Mann c 1800. The Tower was
restored in 1931 to provide a room for Vita on the first floor and this,
together with two other rooms, is shown to visitors. Extensive views of the
whole garden and the wider Kent countryside may be seen from the top of the
Tower.

GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS The formal gardens contained by the entrance range
to the west, and by the arms of the moat to the north and east, were created by
the Nicolsons largely between 1930 and 1939. Although a collaboration between
husband and wife, Sir Harold is credited with designing the formal structure of
the garden's separate enclosures, or ' succession of intimacies' as he
described them, linked by vistas, and Vita with the exuberant planting. The
garden was cared for from 1959 to 1990 by the joint head gardeners, Pamela
Schwerdt and Sibylle Kreutzberger.

From the entrance range, the arch beneath the gatehouse, reopened from its
bricked-up state in 1931, leads into the rectangular, walled, Front or Tower
courtyard. This is laid to lawn and bisected by a broad flagged path flanked at
its midpoint by four Irish yews (planted 1932) which leads to the foot of the
Tower. Further narrow, flagged paths surround the lawn on the north-west and
south sides with mixed borders and climbing plants against the walls. At the
foot of the north wall, built in 1935, is the noted 'purple' border. The axial
path leads eastwards through the arch beneath the Tower and down a flight of
brick steps onto the Tower Lawn, established in 1931, which occupies the site
of the courtyard of the Elizabethan house. The lawn is enclosed by walls
clothed with climbers on its north, west, and south sides (the last two listed
grade I) and, along the length of the east side, by the high double yew hedge
of the Yew Walk, planted in 1932 and enclosing a flagged path. An opening in
the hedges allows a long vista eastwards from the Tower Courtyard into the
orchard. Contained within the south-east corner of the Tower Lawn is a small
sunken garden with moisture-loving plants, built as the Lion Pond in 1930 but
drained to form the present garden in 1939 (Lord 1995).

An archway in the north wall of the Tower Lawn leads into the White Garden
which is enclosed on its east side by the extension northwards of the Yew Walk
and by the Priest's House in the north-west corner. The garden, which was laid
out by Vita and Harold after the war to replace a more conventional rose garden
(Scott-James 1974), is cruciform in plan and divided into geometric
compartments by a pattern of low box hedges and flagged or brick paths. The
compartments are abundantly planted with flowers and foliage of predominantly
grey or white and an iron-work canopied rose arbour, designed by Nigel Nicolson
in 1970, forms the centrepiece from where there are vistas northwards through a
clairvoie in the north wall and eastwards through an opening in the Yew Walk
into the Orchard. A small vine-covered loggia in the north-west corner served
as an outdoor dining room for the Nicolsons. West of the White Garden a path
along the south front of the Priest's House leads into the garden known as
Delos. Developed informally from the late 1930s and undergoing many subsequent
changes, it is now (1997) informally planted with magnolias, peonies, ferns,
and other trees and shrubs for year-round interest.

South of the Tower Lawn, and on the north/south axis from the White Garden, a
flagged path leads through an archway in the wall into the Rondel, a circular
yew-hedged enclosure bisected by north to south and east to west paths and vistas,
which forms the centrepiece of the Rose Garden. Flagged paths (grassed until
the 1980s) divide box-edged rectangular beds which are filled with a wealth of
old-fashioned roses mixed with flowering shrubs and herbaceous plants and
climbers. The structure of the Rose Garden was designed by Harold Nicolson and
planted in 1937 on the site of their former kitchen garden. The west end of the
east/west axial path terminates in a high brick wall with a crescent-shaped
arbour, built in 1935 (ibid).

The path from the south side of the Rondel leads southwards into the west end
of the Lime Walk, designed by Harold Nicolson and begun in 1932. The wide,
central flagged walk is enclosed along its north and south sides by tall
hornbeam hedges fronted by borders of massed spring bulbs beneath the avenue of
pleached lime trees. The present trees were planted in 1978 to replace the
originals of 1936. Some 25m eastwards along the Lime Walk, an opening in the
northern hedge forms the approach to the Cottage Garden. A path of paving
stones and bricks, on the axis of the south front of South Cottage (the first
building the Nicolsons made habitable in 1930), leads to the central feature of
a large planted copper, guarded by four Irish yews planted in 1934 (ibid). The
abundant planting around the narrow paths is concentrated on the warm shades of
red, yellow, and orange.

East of the Cottage Garden, a path leads down a flight of brick steps onto the
lawn of the Moat Walk which extends north-eastwards on the site of the southern
moat arm and which is focused on a statue of Dionysus (installed 1932, replaced
1995) standing within a niche in the beech hedge on the east side of the
eastern moat arm. The north side of the Moat Walk is defined by the brick moat
wall while to the south, a bank of azaleas separates it from the Nuttery. This
grove of coppiced hazel, surviving from c 1900 (Lord 1995) was planted with the
present shade-loving woodland plants in 1975, to replace the Nicolsons'
original underplanting of polyanthus. At the east end of the Nuttery, clipped
yew hedges enclose the small rectangular Herb Garden laid out by Vita in 1938
with square beds separated by narrow paths, their present brick and stone
surface replacing the original grass surface. On the north side of the Herb Garden,
at the south end of the moat arm, the two rectangular beds forming a small
thyme lawn were laid out by Vita in 1948 (ibid). From this south-east corner,
the water-filled moat arms extend along the eastern and northern boundaries of
the gardens and enclose the Orchard. Planted by the Nicolsons in 1937 to its
present appearance with fruit trees, roses, and spring bulbs in long grass, the
Orchard was probably first established c 1900 (ibid). Mown grass paths both cut
across it and run alongside the moat, focusing on the octagonal gazebo (built
in 1969 in memory of Harold Nicolson) to the north-east at the junction of the
moat arms. The Orchard also contains a dovecote (erected 1954) and a Greek
altar.

PARK The present parkland lies to the south-west and south-east of the gardens.
A walk which runs along the outer banks of the north and east moat arms
continues south-eastwards, through the remnants of a poplar avenue originally
planted with thirty-six trees, to the two lakes which the Nicolsons constructed
in 1930 by damming the stream (Scott-James 1974). The lakes are largely
enclosed by woodland to the south-east and are surrounded by a perimeter walk.

The parkland which extends south-westwards is laid to pasture with a light
scatter of trees, including some replacement of losses in the storm of 1987. A
park was probably established at Sissinghurst with the building of the house c
1500 and is mentioned in deeds between 1531 and 1631 (Inspector's Report 1988).
Andrews, Dury and Herbert's map of Kent of 1769 shows a park occupying the site
of Roundshill Park Wood (outside the area here registered), the southern
two-thirds of the present parkland and additional land to the west. This area
(c 70ha) is clearly shown as parkland on the OS Surveyor's drawings of
1797-1801. Greenwood's map of 1819-20 records this same area as Sissinghurst
Park although woodland appears to be established by then in Roundshill Park
Wood. By 1840 (Tithe map) fragmentation of the park into small woods and fields
has occurred; the boundaries and planting pattern of the present parkland
appear established on the OS 1st edition of 1876, indicating a mid to late C19
origin.

Maps J Andrews, A Dury and W Herbert, A Topographical Map of the County of
Kent, 2" to 1 mile, 1769 C Greenwood, Map of the County of Kent from an
actual survey made in the years 1819 and 1820, c 1" to 1 mile, 1821 Tithe
map for Cranbrook parish, 1840 (Centre for Kentish Studies, Maidstone)

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Sunday, 6 May 2012

This castle is listed under the Planning (Listed
Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 as amended for its special
architectural or historic interest. It’s list entry Number is 1044134
and it is found in the sleepy town of Bodiam in Robertsbridge, East Sussex,
England. The castle is of gradeI status and was first listed on
3rd August 1961

Tuesday, 1 May 2012

I love the word 'Free' - whats not to like, even though it is a bit of a misnomer. Nothing is actually 'free' per se, but with the current economic crisis and all that, making something is not only rewarding but it can save a small fortune!

Did I really make a studio for free then?

Well not really but it didn't spend anything after deciding to do it. It wasn't hard either, certainly easier than driving to my 'local' camera shop 30 miles away and driving back and setting it up and finding out how to use it and packing it away... You get the idea! All it was was some old stuff I had lying around...

The Kit Used:

Software:

Photoshop

Camera Equipment:

Jessops external Flash

DSLR body (D7000)

Tamron 70-300mm (at 180mm)

Remote control for a remote shutter release (helpful, but a self timer function built into most cameras will work fine)

Tripod

Other Stuff:

Table

An old carboard box about 50-75 cm tall, 10-20 cm deep

Big stack of books - more is better as you can always not use some, as opposed to stuggling if you don't have enough

scissors or a knife

a large black cloth (I used an old bed sheet)

Smoke source (I used an incense stick, but I guess even a cigarette would do)

Plate for the smoke - incense sticks can drop embers as can cigarettes so a plate acts as a little protection

If you wanted to, there is absolutely no reason why I (or anyone for that matter) couldn't have got a shot just like this one on any other DSLR camera as long as it can have a shutter speed of 1 second.

Preparation:

I simply chopped off part of the box so that it still had 3 sides. I actually left one of the ends on the box too so I could place some weight on it for stability, but resting it on a wall would do the job just as well. I placed it so it was taller than it was wide.

I drapped an old black bedsheet over the box to make a clean background for the smoke to stand out against, placed a stack of books on the table and set the smoke going using an incense stick. I placed the flashgun behind the books aimed upwards towards where the smoke would be.

I set up the camera by focussing and positioning it correctly and making sure it was set so that the built in flash wouldnot fire, pulled the curtains shut and turned off the lights. Using the Nikon remote control on a 2 second delay, I set the delay countdown off. When the shutter opened I fired it within the next 1/2 second or so by pressing the test button on the back of the flashgun.

Result

This meant that the camera would only be exposed effectively for a fraction of a second despite having the shutter time of 1 second. I think all in all I took about 15-20 images (one of the great advantages of DSLRs).

I uploaded them to the computer in an instant (another one of the great advantages of DSLRs) and was immediatly dismayed - the smoke was either blown for some reason so it was not in the right place, or the smoke trails were simply quite boring.

As I was reviewing them, I spotted the potential in this one and decided to play around with it. I loaded photoshop and mirrored the image down the centre, applied a layer with a few colours in it and saved it with the watermark.

I love this image, even thouigh I am generally not for using a computer to touch up an image. To be honest, I felt quite relieved, mainly for two reasons:-

I had set out to create something which looked good visually and after farting around with it came up with an image I was happy and proud of

and I had managed to prove that with an old box and the kit I already owned I could set up a studio in my living room (albeit rather small)

Conclusion

So as you can see, there is very little costs involved with this project, and it makes a great photography project or opportunity for a rainy day, if you are bored or secretly a miser. I still have the box and cloth now and still bring it out now and then when I find time.

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